Who's Afraid of the Teddy Bear's Picnic? - A Story of Sexual Abuse and Recovery Through Psychotherapy (Paperback)


by Pamela Denise Smart A STORY OF SEXUAL ABUSE AND RECOVERY THROUGH PSYCHOTHERAPY ISBN: 978 1 84747 026 3 Published: 2006 Pages: 200 Description A powerful and often disturbingly graphic book about childhood abuse and its effects in later life. Pam has been through years of psychotherapy to be able to write this book about her harrowing experiences. Certainly not one for the faint hearted. About the Author Pam was born in Stoke-Newington in London. She is a mother and a grandmother. She worked as a social worker with Islington Social Services for over twenty years. Pam is now a practicing psychotherapist and lives with her partner and their dog in West Sussex.Pam is happy and settled; family, friends and colleges surround her. However life wasn't always this way for Pam. She came from a background of horrific abuse, neglect and permanent emotional fear. As a young adult she was diagnosed as incurable and her future was bleak. After years of being mistreated, with the help of enlightened professionals she slowly emerged from a world of confusion and distress to discover her own strengths and abilities.Pam wrote this book to give hope to others with similar stories and to the profess home were. We had no adults of our own to be attached to and the attention of the members of staff from the children's home became very important. Some children were apparently favoured because they were very young or because they made the staff feel valued. There were also individual preferences, Mummy Robins for instance did not like boys and some children learnt to behave in such a way that the staff felt good about them. It is important to remember that staff would have been untrained, ordinary women and men who were of low status. Perhaps it was a job that was taken up because it provided both accommodation and pay rather than because of any love of children. For myself, as a result of the psychotherapeutic work that has been done with me over the years, I now can see how devastating was the loss of my little friend, Ruthy, who had enabled me to join in the world of children. Once Ruthy left the Hollies I again became isolated amongst the other children. helped me to feel valued, but also made me an object of envy and hatred with other children. Under the circumstances my gravitation towards my brothers was inevitable. Touch and comfort would have been important to all of us, however it came about because of the lack of warmth in our environment. I found out many years later that my brother Joe had already been sexually abused by a member of staff in the children's home, and therefore had a precocious knowledge of sexual behaviour. I am not sure whether Dennis had also been abused. I find it incredible that the staff were unaware of the physical abuse that was already taking place when my brothers and I went on home visits. We all must have had bruises and marks on our bodies. Corporal punishment was common in those days, but this was at unacceptable level in any time. Perhaps the staff did not want the trouble that it would cause. I think that the culture in the children's home was such that children reporting abuse were considered to be telling lies.

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by Pamela Denise Smart A STORY OF SEXUAL ABUSE AND RECOVERY THROUGH PSYCHOTHERAPY ISBN: 978 1 84747 026 3 Published: 2006 Pages: 200 Description A powerful and often disturbingly graphic book about childhood abuse and its effects in later life. Pam has been through years of psychotherapy to be able to write this book about her harrowing experiences. Certainly not one for the faint hearted. About the Author Pam was born in Stoke-Newington in London. She is a mother and a grandmother. She worked as a social worker with Islington Social Services for over twenty years. Pam is now a practicing psychotherapist and lives with her partner and their dog in West Sussex.Pam is happy and settled; family, friends and colleges surround her. However life wasn't always this way for Pam. She came from a background of horrific abuse, neglect and permanent emotional fear. As a young adult she was diagnosed as incurable and her future was bleak. After years of being mistreated, with the help of enlightened professionals she slowly emerged from a world of confusion and distress to discover her own strengths and abilities.Pam wrote this book to give hope to others with similar stories and to the profess home were. We had no adults of our own to be attached to and the attention of the members of staff from the children's home became very important. Some children were apparently favoured because they were very young or because they made the staff feel valued. There were also individual preferences, Mummy Robins for instance did not like boys and some children learnt to behave in such a way that the staff felt good about them. It is important to remember that staff would have been untrained, ordinary women and men who were of low status. Perhaps it was a job that was taken up because it provided both accommodation and pay rather than because of any love of children. For myself, as a result of the psychotherapeutic work that has been done with me over the years, I now can see how devastating was the loss of my little friend, Ruthy, who had enabled me to join in the world of children. Once Ruthy left the Hollies I again became isolated amongst the other children. helped me to feel valued, but also made me an object of envy and hatred with other children. Under the circumstances my gravitation towards my brothers was inevitable. Touch and comfort would have been important to all of us, however it came about because of the lack of warmth in our environment. I found out many years later that my brother Joe had already been sexually abused by a member of staff in the children's home, and therefore had a precocious knowledge of sexual behaviour. I am not sure whether Dennis had also been abused. I find it incredible that the staff were unaware of the physical abuse that was already taking place when my brothers and I went on home visits. We all must have had bruises and marks on our bodies. Corporal punishment was common in those days, but this was at unacceptable level in any time. Perhaps the staff did not want the trouble that it would cause. I think that the culture in the children's home was such that children reporting abuse were considered to be telling lies.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Chipmunkapublishing

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

2006

Availability

Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days

First published

2006

Authors

Dimensions

203 x 127 x 13mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

228

ISBN-13

978-1-84747-026-3

Barcode

9781847470263

Categories

LSN

1-84747-026-2



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